Peter Ochs (born Aug. 20, 1752, Nantes, France—died June 19, 1821, Basel, Switz.) was a Swiss revolutionary who wrote most of the constitution of the unitary Helvetic Republic (1798).
Born in France of a family that claimed roots in the Basel aristocracy, Ochs in 1769 settled in Basel, where, after becoming doctor of laws (1776), he entered into political affairs. Won to the ideas of the Enlightenment, he became an opponent of the “decayed Confederation” and, with the outbreak of the French Revolution, joined the partisans of revolutionary reform in Switzerland. He championed French intervention in the old confederation and urged acceptance of the French Directory’s demands for curtailing traditional rights of asylum and expelling émigrés.
In Paris (1796–97) Ochs plotted with Bonaparte the establishment of a Swiss revolutionary government and produced a constitutional draft for the proposed state modeled closely upon the French constitution of 1795. With few emendations, his document was accepted as the charter of the Helvetic Republic (April 12, 1798). In the new regime, Ochs served as first president of the Helvetic Senate and, later, as president of the state executive organ, the Directory. Deposed by the party of Frédéric-César de La Harpe (June 25, 1799), he played a diminishing role in national politics. In Basel, however, he achieved local prominence for his part in devising new governmental and penal codes (1813, 1821) and reorganizing the city university.